The most painful battles I fight are with myself.
I have occasional conflicts with other people, of course, but those are easier to resolve or to ignore. I have to live with myself all the time. I have to live with the person I’ve decided to become today, but I also have to live with various versions of myself from the past. And those differing versions of me can often fight each other for control.
I’ve decided not to be argumentative and angry with other people online. It’s been a conscious decision not to live that way anymore, even though I used to have vicious verbal battles with others, on social media and on message boards before that.
I’ve learned that this sort of vicious argument doesn’t help anyone. I’ve learned that acting in those ways often makes me ignore my own values. And I’ve learned that the toxicity I can spew in one of those battles hurts me more than it hurts the person at whom the words are directed.
But when I feel attacked by someone — as I do tonight — I want to strike back. I have a foolish need to defend my pride. And I can be insecure enough to believe I need to strike back — or else other people won’t think I’m able to prove myself right.
Part of me knows that I need to walk away from such attacks, but another part of me — the person who still thinks and feels the way I used to — is eager to strike back in self-righteous anger.
The toxic inner battle between these parts of me — the person I’ve chosen to be and the person I used to be — leaves me feeling painful inner conflict about who I really am.

Beauty queen’s suicide leaves me pondering lesson of Richard Cory
I’m weary of degenerate society where my values aren’t welcome
I’m paralyzed by fear my choices won’t match needs of future wife
Great ideas are valuable, but they’re worthless without solid execution
Years later, Supreme Court justice apologizes to Susette Kelo … sorta
Some of us don’t seem ‘wired up’ to stay sane working for others
Anarchist vs. minarchist debate misses the shift to post-statist world
Confirmation bias means most of us assume our opponents are ‘morans’
Tough problem: What does a free society do about unfit parents?